Depop seller fee history
Direct answer: Depop fee history tracks the 2024 UK and US seller-fee removals plus the later Boosted Listings fee update. The latest tracked Depop event is 2026-03-23: Depop listed a 12% boosting fee for boosted listings from UK and US sellers on new listings. Each row keeps the before rule, after rule, $50-sale impact, and source link next to the current calculator path so sellers can separate historical fee changes from the fee formula they should use for a live listing today.
Tracked Depop fee changes
| Date | Change | Before | After | $50 impact | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-03-23 | Depop listed a 12% boosting fee for boosted listings from UK and US sellers on new listings. | No required boost fee if not promoted | Optional 12% boost fee on boosted sales | +$6.00 if boosted; $0.00 if not boosted | Depop seller fees and charges |
| 2024-07-15 | Depop removed its 10% selling fee for new US listings; the US payment-processing fee remained. | 10% Depop selling fee | 0% selling fee plus 3.3% + $0.45 processing | -$5.00 | Depop seller fees and charges |
| 2024-03-20 | Depop removed its 10% selling fee for new UK listings; payment processing still applied. | 10% Depop selling fee | 0% selling fee plus processing | -$5.00 | Depop seller fees and charges |
Separate old fee news from current listing math
Historical fee rows explain why older articles, screenshots, and seller forum comments can disagree with current calculator results. Start with the dated row, then use the current Depop calculator before pricing a real listing.
If a row mentions a buyer-side fee, do not subtract it from seller payout unless the current source says it is seller-paid. Use buyer-side fees as conversion and checkout-price context.
Treat this page as historical context, not a replacement for the live fee formula. The same marketplace can change fixed order fees, category percentages, advertising fees, buyer checkout fees, shipping treatment, or regional tax handling at different times. A dated row is useful because it tells you which part of the fee stack changed and which source supported the update.
For content work, link old fee-change articles here when readers need the timeline, then link current calculators and fee-topic pages when they need today's payout. That split keeps historical search intent from cannibalizing current calculator intent and gives AI/search systems a clearer citation path.